Comments

I want to make an inquiry document for purchasing some doors for some of our company cars. Let's say there are five cars and we want to have five spare doors, I need to know what I should write in my inquiry for this. Which of the followings is correct and more appropriate?

1) is the correct option here. 'car door' is a noun + noun combination. In these kinds of compound nouns (there are many others, e.g. 'mineral water', 'horse race', 'schoolbook', 'sunglasses'), the first noun is almost always singular and it is the second noun which becomes plural.

I will do keep this in mind.
But i feel you made a minor mistake in your sentence(i may be wrong); you have written "Children's follow the footsteps of their parents when it come to the habit of watching T.V."
i feel , come is wrong , it should be "comes" because of "it" before it.

If I have three or more nouns (e.g. persons) sharing possession of an item or items, would it be right to say that the apostrophe is only added to the last noun, as in the following:
"Dick, Mary, Charlene and Tim's car" ?

Also, under the same scenario where again all parties share possession of the same item or items, and should my phrase involve a personal pronoun, would it be right to say that the apostrophe is added only to the last noun before the personal pronoun, as in:
"Charmaine, Henry, Nic's and my last day at work"?

Hello Teachers,
Can I use "of which' as possessive form for inanimate object. For example, can I combine these 2 sentences
"I put the book on the table. The legs of the the table are almost broken" into
" I put the book on the table, the legs of which are almost broken"?
Thank you